Amor Seco
(Desmodium ascendens - 54mg per serving)
This is the one herb that has actually inspired the indigenous Amazonians to
compose many songs about its wonders. One of the ways Jatoba seems to address energy
is through supporting the liver which is the heart of enzymes in your body.
Take a breath. Stop. Don?t let it out. Keep reading. Instead of taking it
for granted, hold it in and savor it. Feel how satisfying the oxygen feels in
your chest. Don?t let it out, but take only tiny, shallow baby breaths - mere
sips - of air in and out. Then notice how within just a few seconds that is all
you can think about. Now go back to normal breathing. None of us are more than a
few seconds from needing air. We are literally living on the edge 24/7.
Breathing is health. Nutrients that facilitate optimum diaphragm, sinus,
bronchial, and lung functioning are able to benefit health by every measure -
from cancer resistance to wound healing, to complexion, to sexual optimization,
to mental clarity The list goes on and on...
When
you read the research on the Amor Seco plant, you see words like anti-anaphylactic,
anti-asthmatic, anti-inflammatory, bronchodilator, and many references
to asthma and bronchitis. In Central America, the same phytonutrients
have been observed to be helpfulin all sorts of aches and pains - head,
neck, back, joints and muscles - rheumatism and arthritis.
The more we know about phytonutrition, malnutrition, toxic environment,
toxic diet, arthritis and allergies, the better we understand how the
same phytonutrients can help with the seemingly diverse issues of arthritis
and asthma. They share similar root chemistry aggravated by phytonutrient
malnutrition. Get the right phyto-catalysts and their environment disappears
- along with all the varying ailments it accommodated.
In indigenous Amazonia, Amor Seco is also thought to help re-ignite
fading or lost heart-love. It is regarded as magic, though research
is scant on its effects on pheromones or perhaps other more subtle,
yet to be discovered avenues of amour. However, there does seem to be
a connection between this plant and the female reproductive system -
and thus, very likely to pheromone signals of fertility and attraction
- the real magic.
Quoted from Raintree Nutrition
In some cultures, Amor Seco is used against ringworm, and in others it is
used as a digestive aid. It is a digestive balancer used to bring relief from
constipation as well as from diarrhea. In modern Peruvian herbal medicine, Amor
Seco is employed as a blood purifier, and is favored where environmental toxins
are stuck in the system and interfering with health. In diverse cultures, Amor
Seco is used for a variety of female urogenital and reproductive issues from
infections and venereal diseases, to lending support for the ovaries.
This herb has been found beneficial to those suffering from nervousness. And
one ethnobotanical survey of 8,000 scattered Amazonians noted it as a common
remedy for malaria. Along the Ivory Coast of Africa, where it also grows, it is
held as an aphrodisiac. This plant grows to about 2 feet tall with lavender flowers
and tiny green bean pods. It is very effective in low amounts with no known toxicity
or side effects.
| MAIN ACTIONS: |
OTHER ACTIONS: |
| reduces pain |
cleanses blood |
| blocks allergies |
detoxifies |
| reduces asthma |
increases urination |
| reduces convulsions |
moves bowels |
| blocks histamine |
heals wounds |
| reduces inflammation |
|
| reduces spasms |
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| dilates bronchials |
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| relaxes muscles |
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Synonyms: Desmodium coeruleum, D. caespitosum, D. glaucescens, D.
heterophyllum, D. oxalidifolium, D. triflorum, Hedysarum adscendens, H.
caespitosum, Meibomia adscendens
Common Names: amor seco, amor-do-campo, strong back, pega
pega, margarita, beggar-lice, burbur, manayupa, hard man, hard stick,
mundubirana, barba de boi, mundurana, owono-bocon, dipinda dimukuyi, dusa
karnira, tick-clover, tick-trefoil
Part Used: aerial parts, leaves
Amor seco is a weedy, perennial herb that grows to 50 cm tall and produces numerous
light-purple flowers and green fruits in small, beanlike pods. It is indigenous to many
tropical countries and grows in open forests, pastures, along roadsides, and like many
weeds - just about anywhere the soil is disturbed. In Brazil, the plant is known as
amor seco or amor-do-campo; Peruvians call the plant manayupa.
The Desmodium genus is a large one, with about 400 species of perennial and annual herbs
growing in temperate and tropical regions in the Western hemisphere,
Australia, and South Africa. In the South American tropics, Desmodium
axillare, a closely related plant, is used interchangeably in herbal
medicine systems.
TRIBAL AND HERBAL MEDICINE USES
Today, tribes in the Amazon rainforest use amor seco
medicinally much as they have for centuries. A tea of the plant is given for
nervousness, and it is used in baths to treat vaginal infections. Some tribes
believe the plant has magic powers, and it is taken by lovers to rekindle a
waning romance. Rio Pastaza natives in the Amazon brew a leaf tea and wash the
breasts of mothers with it to promote milk flow. Additional indigenous tribal
uses include a leaf decoction for consumption, an application of pounded
leaves and lime juice for wounds, and a leaf infusion for convulsions and
venereal sores. A survey, in which more than 8,000 natives in various parts of
Brazil were interviewed, showed that a decoction of the dried roots of amor
seco is a popular tribal remedy for malaria. The indigenous Garifuna tribe in
Nicaragua uses a leaf decoction of amor seco internally for diarrhea and
venereal disease and to aid digestion.
Amor seco is also quite popular in herbal medicine
throughout South and Central America. In Peruvian herbal medicine today, a
leaf tea is used as a blood cleanser; to detoxify the body from environmental
toxins and chemicals; as a urinary tract cleanser; and to treat ovarian and
uterine problems such as inflammation and irritation, vaginal discharges, and
hemorrhages. In Belize (where the plant is called "strong back"), the entire
plant is soaked in rum for 24 hours, and then 1/4 cup is taken three times
daily for seven to ten days for backaches. Alternatively, an entire plant is
boiled in 3 cups of water for 10 minutes, and 1 cup of warm tea is taken
before meals for three to five days for relief of backache, muscle pains,
kidney ailments, and impotence. In Brazilian herbal medicine, the dried leaves
are used for the treatment of asthma, vaginal discharge, body aches and pains,
ovarian inflammation, excessive urination, excessive mucus, and diarrhea. In
Ghana, a leaf decoction is a popular remedy for bronchial asthma,
constipation, dysentery, and colic, and is also used to dress wounds.
PLANT CHEMICALS
Amor seco is known to be rich in flavonoids, alkaloids, and
chemicals known as soyasaponins. A novel soyasaponin in amor seco is
dehydrosoyasaponin. It is considered a highly active chemical with therapeutic
actions for asthma. Amor seco also contains a chemical called astragalin,
which is a well-known antibacterial chemical found in the popular medicinal
plant astragalus. Amor seco's traditional uses for infections, venereal
diseases, and wounds are probably related to this particular chemical in the
plant.
Main chemicals found in amor seco include astragalin, beta-phenylethylamines,
cosmosiin, cyanidin-3-o-sophoroside, dehydrosoyasaponins, hordenine,
pelargonidin-3-o-rhamnoside, salsoline, soyasaponins, tectorigenin,
tetrahydroisoquinolines, and tyramine.
BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITIES AND CLINICAL RESEARCH
Herbalists in Ghana have long used amor seco leaves to
treat bronchial asthma. The treatment was so successful that it attracted
attention from the scientific community. In 1977, a clinical observational
study on humans showed that 1 to 2 teaspoons of dried amor seco leaf powder
daily (in three dosages) produced improvement and remission in most asthma
patients treated. In an effort to understand the anti-asthmatic properties of
this effective natural remedy, scientists conducted various animal studies to
determine how it worked. In ten different studies, researchers found that amor
seco interfered with the production of many of the chemicals normally produced
during an asthma attack: chemicals called spasmogens that cause contractions
in the lung; histamine that triggers the allergic response; and chemicals
called leukotrienes that are known to stimulate bronchoconstriction and
increase mucus production in the airway - all key features of asthma. Many
substances and allergens can cause a life-threatening allergic reaction called
anaphylactic shock, or anaphylaxis. Several of these animal studies reported
that amor seco had an anti-anaphylactic action against many known substances
that trigger such allergic reactions. Bronchoconstriction (the tendency of
airways to constrict or become too narrow, thereby making it hard to breath)
in response to various stimuli and allergens is a universal feature of asthma
and anaphylactic reactions. Some researchers noted that amor seco has a
muscle-relaxing effect in lung tissues (bronchodilator) and inhibited
contractions and constriction induced by a variety of substances. Amor seco
has also been shown to activate the chemical process known as potassium maxi-K
channels. Maxi-K channels play an important role in regulating the tone of
airway smooth muscle and the release of constrictive substances in the lungs.
One of amor seco's chemicals, dehydrosoyasaponin I, was cited as being "the
most potent known potassium (maxi-K) channel opener." This effect is also
thought to contribute to amor seco's therapeutic activity in asthma.
Amor seco's documented anti-allergic activity acts to
inhibit not only contraction of smooth muscle in the airways of the upper
respiratory tract but also muscle contraction at multiple other sites
throughout the body. These documented antispasmodic and muscle relaxant
actions help explain why amor seco has been traditionally used for backaches
and muscle spasms. Amor seco has also recently been documented in animal
studies to have pain-relieving actions as well as anticonvulsant actions.
CURRENT PRACTICAL USES
Natural health practitioners and herbalists in South America today use this
herbal remedy mainly for asthma and allergies and for muscle spasms and back
pain. With some newer published research linking arthritis and rheumatism to
various allergic reactions (and some of the same allergy-induced chemical
processes found in asthma), the indigenous use of amor seco for back pain and
arthritis may become the subject of future research. Amor seco is easy to
administer and is highly effective at low dosages. In addition, its lack of
side effects or toxicity places it in the first line of defense in the
herbalist's medicine chest of natural remedies.
The above text has been quoted from the book, Herbal
Secrets of the Rainforest
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